Skip to main content

tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  September 30, 2014 3:00am-6:01am PDT

3:00 am
log on to our #keeptalking. >> thank you for joining us. we'll see you tomorrow, on wednesday. >> "fox & friends" starts right now. bye. >> good morning. it is tuesday, september 30. i'm elisabeth hasselbeck. we begin with a fox news alert. this realtor vanished while showing a home. overnight. her body just discovered in a shallow grave. this morning police have this man behind bars. we are live with the developing details straight ahead. >> forget about listening to intel. here's the real reason the white house underestimated isis. >> predicting the will of foreign security forces to fight for their country is difficult. >> and this as a new report reveals that the president only read about half of his daily intel briefings. and that's not good. >> he was just arrested on
3:01 am
terror charges but this imam sure doesn't sound sorry. >> if terrorism is seeng up for islam and saying people have a right to defend themselves, obviously we're happy to be labeled. >> that is not all he had to say and we taped the rest of it. you're not going to believe it shall although -- believe it, although you should. mornings, by the way, are better with friends. >> hi everybody. welcome to the final show of september for 2014. >> you are right about that. thank you for being with us this morning. >> how's it going, elisabeth? we have a lot of breaking news today. a huge roster of guests as well. >> we have breaking news out of arkansas to bring you. >> police confirming they have just found the body of that missing real estate agent we've been telling you about, beverly carter. heather childers is here with developing detail. good morning, heather. >> good morning. this is a sad conclusion to
3:02 am
this story at this point. this is happening just hours before the man suspected of murdering her makes his first court appearance. 33-year-old aaron lewis behind bars thanks to this 911 call. >> we're looking for a guy that was involved in a realtor being kidnapped. and this guy looks like, and he is nervous and out here at a bus stop. >> that is when hugh wis realized -- when lewis realized he had been recognized and he took off but witnesses would not let him get away. >> the guy ran off and we took off after him. my buddy followed him one way and i went the other way to make sure he couldn't double back and the realtors that work in that shopping center were running behind us and running with him and we got him cornered in the office building. >> yes, they did. and investigators grilled lewis for more than 12 hours. we are told he admitted to
3:03 am
kidnapping carter but did not reveal her whereabouts at that time. he is no stranger to the law. he has been arrested multiple times in arkansas, missouri and utah. most recently lewis was serving a six-year prison sentence for a robbery he committed back in 2010, but he was released on parole last august for good behavior. yesterday beverly carter's son joined us with his emotional message. >> you're my rock. you're my very first friend, and i love you so, so, so much. and i need you. our family needs you. and i want you to be strong. we'll find you. >> police say that they found beverly's body in a shallow grave behind a concrete mixing business. of the home that she was showing near little rock. and our prayers definitely go to that family today and we'll continue to follow
3:04 am
that story. back to you. >> heather childers, live with the latest. >> thank you. we did speak with her son yesterday and you could feel the hope he had and fear in his heart. and our prayers go out to their family today. it is devastating to hear that revealed. >> a heartbreaking ending to that story. four minutes after the top of the hour. heather nauert is back with us today with headlines. >> good morning to you. i've got news starting out overseas this morning. it is a fox news alert. overnight a 23-year-old man in australia charged with funding terrorism. australian authorities say the melbourne suspect gave $12,000 to a u.s. citizen who is fighting alongside isis and also provided money to the al qaeda linked group al-nusra. this arrest coming a week after melbourne police fatally shot a terror suspect. police say those two incidents are not connected. >> a shocking new report about this month's major white house security breach. we now know that the armed white house intruder made
3:05 am
it a lot farther into the presidential mansion than the secret service originally admitted. omar gonzalez got into the white house. he overpowered a female secret service officer and ran through the east room to the direction of the green room where he was finally tackled by a counterassault agent. this sets the stage for what is going to be a heated congressional hearing today. the secret service director will face lawmakers a few hours from now. could police searching for hannah graham be dealing with a serial killer? there are new details that link the suspect jesse matthew to the 2009 disappearance and death of a second young woman, and there could be more. forensic evidence shows matthew is possibly linked to the disappearance and death of a 20-year-old virginia tech student, morgan harrington. matthew was arrested last week in connection with the disappearance of 18-year-old hannah graham, a student at the university of virginia. the parents of morgan harrington holding on to
3:06 am
the hop that hannah will be found. >> we know where morgan is. hannah graham is still missing, and her family needs to know where she is. we need to bring hannah home. >> if the forensic evidence holds up there is likely a third victim linked to the suspect. matthew is due in court thursday this week. for the first time nascar driver tony stewart speaking openly about the accident that killed a fellow racer. his comments coming days after we learned he won't face charges for that incident. stewart admits he didn't get out of bed for days out of that crash and doesn't know when he will return to racing. he also says he's available to the ward family. >> i want to be available to them if they want to talk about it. at this point i don't need -- i don't need to talk to them for closure. i know what happened. and i know it was an accident. >> recent toxicology reports said ward had enough marijuana in his
3:07 am
system at the time of the crash to impair his judgment. those are your headlines on a busy news day. >> glad you're back. >> many people are fixated on the interview where the president of the united states talked about isis and said james clapper, the head of the intelligence service that oversees the c.i.a. and f.b.i. said isis caught us by surprise. upon further review, if you look at the facts, look at the testimony they did not catch anybody by surprise if you were paying attention. and there's more and more clues to the fact that by saying that and throwing the intel community under the bus so to speak, he has really ticked him off. >> they are so angry. they say we've been providing the president with information since before he was reelected. what's curious is in the interview the president initially said they missed it. but as it turns out, he missed it because now there is a story out this morning from the government
3:08 am
accountability institute that says that the president of the united states only attended 42% of his daily intel briefings. only 42%. less than half. that is about the same as his first term, which curious is the former president, george w. bush, rarely missed his. maybe he missed isis because he missed the briefings. >> there was a decrease in attendance in a second term. 42.4% in the first term. 41.3% in the second. if you think about that, if you're almost 60% of the time opting out of sitting down face-to-face with the best of the best of intelligence while we have the worst of the worst happening in the world, is that good enough for america? is that good enough for the globe that your national security interests are in the low 40's? six out of ten times you say i don't need to be there. >> one they think he does say is i prefer to get on
3:09 am
my ipad and read it on my own but very rarely gave follow-up questions to the intelligence briefers. not only were they not there to fire back questions to him -- president bush had the reputation if you were not ready to present the d.n.i., the they the assessment, don't go in there because he would be pummeling you. >> you know why this president wants it in writing? there is a reason. he wants it in writing so nobody will be able to testify i personally warned the president about a threat. they don't want that with this administration. >> there is that suspicion. >> absolutely. in the meantime colonel allen west had the observation that any time the president is taking credit for something, he says "i" or"me" but when something bad is happening they use "they." ed henry and josh earnest were talking about they in this exchange. >> why did he use the word "they"? they underestimated. why didn't he say we? isn't jim clapper part of the president's team? >> of course he is.
3:10 am
>> everybody in the u.s. government was surprised at that. nobody failed? nobody is going to be held accountable? >> predicting the will of the foreign security forces to fight for their country is difficult. >> yeah, but our intel people were doing it accurately before the reelection back in 2012. so it wasn't difficult. all they had to do was listen. all the president had to do was -- >> isis controlling 35,000 square miles of land here. >> they're a mile from baghdad right now. >> you think about it and you're wondering wait a second, is this so we continue singing ding-dong the witch is dead? we have nothing to do, we're victorious. brit hume says these are inexcusable excuses. >> let's assume there was a failure and all the intens agencies -- intelligence agencies failed to warn the president about isis. in february of this year isis captured ramadi and
3:11 am
fallujah, two big cities in iraq formerly the focus of activities in the past. you'd think it might have dawned on somebody in the white house, especially the president, that gee, this little terrorist group is turning out to be much more of an army we've seen before doing things that usually only armies can do, that is capturing and occupying territory. maybe we ought to yourry about this. >> -- we ought to worry about this. >> lieutenant colonel michael flynn testified that this group is spreading from syria into iraq and demonstrated recently by taking ramadi and fallujah and the wall street adjourn had a lead editorial on it on january 6 saying there's flags flying in ramadi and fallujah. >> a key person from the state department said we've seen upwards of 40 suicide bombers per month. this is an actual permissive operating
3:12 am
environment due to inherent weakness of iraqi security forces. that was november of last year. >> sean hannity had a guest on last night, a muslim cleric who was recently jailed. at one point sean asked him would you like to join isis? he said, well, they've revoked my passport. i can't go. but nonetheless, mr. choudry did say terrorists don't hide. they're out in the open because they are proud to be terrorists. >> you heard your cronies to be proud to be called terrorists, and you sneered on a trip abroad funded by benefits when you took a recent trip. >> you know, sean, if terrorism is standing up for islam and saying people have a right to defend themselves, then obviously we're quite happy to be labeled. there's nothing called suicide in islam. there is something called using your body sometimes in the battle field against your enemy. >> he also said the media coverage on isis has been
3:13 am
biased. >> right. absolutely. he's a brilliant word smith. straight ahead? >> we know the man who busted into the white house with a knife, that he made it much farther inside than what we were first told. what is going on here? two former secret service agents are going to explain next. >> news the first pictures inside george clooney's wedding. we got a picture of the dress. stick around. ♪ ♪ [ engine turns over, bell dings ] ♪
3:14 am
great. this is the last thing i need. [ hand ] seriously? the last thing you need is some guy giving you a new catalytic converter
3:15 am
when all you got is a loose gas cap. let's take this puppy over to midas and get you some of that good old midas touch. hey you know what? i'll drive! i really didn't think this through. [ male announcer ] get the midas touch maintenance package including an oil change for only $24.99. and here's a deal, use your midas credit card and get a rebate of $25. oil. tires. brakes. everything. trust the midas touch. oil. ♪ires. brakes. everything. who's going to do it? who's going to make it happen? discover a new energy source. turn ocean waves into power. design cars that capture their emissions.
3:16 am
build bridges that fix themselves. get more clean water to everyone. who's going to take the leap? who's going to write the code? who's going to do it? engineers. that's who. that's what i want to do. be an engineer. ♪ [ male announcer ] join the scientists and engineers of exxonmobil in inspiring america's future engineers. energy lives here. i have $40,ney do you have in your pocket right now? $21. could something that small make an impact on something as big as your retirement? i don't think so. well if you start putting that towards your retirement every week and let it grow over time, for twenty to thirty years, that retirement challenge might not seem so big after all.
3:17 am
♪ it's going to be big. in a few hours the head of the secret service will testify at a congressional hearing over a massive security failure at the white house. shocking new information reveals a fence jumper made it much farther inside the white house than earlier suspected and reported than the secret service even let on. they did not tell the truth. but are they to blame or are their agents' hands tied by too much red tape? first to you, dan. are you surprised? this guy got across the lawn with a knife, through the front door, overpowered an agent and got up the stairs. >> i am surprised, brian. surprised and not
3:18 am
surprised. i'm not sure how to parse my answer here. but the security plan for fence jumpers has worked flawlessly for decades. we've never had an issue before. we've had hundreds of jumpers before. i've been at the white house when someone jumps the fence and it's been so routine to take them down that it doesn't elicit much of a response other than taking them down. but i'm not surprised because it was only a matter of time given the jurisdictional mess in front of the white house and constant pressure on the secret service to maintain optics. it was only a matter of time before someone dd that, sadly, and made it to the front door. >> he got through the front door and then up the stairs. having said that, are you stunned? are you shocked? >> i think stunned is a reasonable descriptive word. i would say to you that i'm not at this point sitting here, i'm not prepared to confirm the extent to which he made entrance into the white house.
3:19 am
i think that will be -- surely that will be covered by the director in her testimony today, and the details of what he did and didn't do will clearly be included in the report that's going to be forthcoming. >> you think the bigger problem is, dan, that these guys are, and these women are overworked and they're part of the department homeland security so they're smothered in bureaucracy? >> you know, brian, we were in the treasury department; they were a pretty big fish in a small pond. it allowed them to do their job largely without a lot of hindrance or just dealing with the bureaucracy with the white house staff. now you're dealing with an entirely new bureaucracy in the d.h.s. which constantly has this pressure, we can't make you guys feel special in the secret service because we've got to pat this agency on the back as well. we could go on and on about overly bureaucratic government but it has very real consequences as we're
3:20 am
seeing. i'm not apologizing. this was a security failure. >> john, your thoughts? >> there's 22 agencies in d.h.s., so with that comes bureaucracy. i would agree with dan in terms of smaller is better in this circumstance and the ability for the secret service to operate unencumbered is critical to maintaining the mission. >> they're going to have a hard time today and they deserve to have a hard time. that was terrible and they didn't tell the truth about it. dan and john, thanks so much. coming up straight ahead, wal-mart blaming tracy morgan for the left him hospitalized and killed his friend. you'll hear it. it is one of the most deadliest cancers killing men in america but dr. samadi says it is up to women to get rid of prostate cancer. he's here.
3:21 am
3:22 am
i see the levy's parked in front of our house again. it's a free country dad. our house. our spot. those are the rules. ok who wants sweet rolls? oh, i do! (whoooosh! smack!) me too! (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) are those king's hawaiian rolls? (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) thanks carol! (electric hedge trimmer) everybody loves the sweet, fluffy deliciouslness of king's hawaiian bread. find us in the deli or in-store bakery. also try the complete line of king's hawaiian sandwich rolls.
3:23 am
3:24 am
all right. some show biz news. wal-mart is blaming performer tracy morgan for his own injuries suffered in that deadly crash in june. wal-mart coming out swinging in a lawsuit saying tracy morgan was injured because he wasn't wearing a seat belt. morgan's lawsuit alleges wal-mart was negligent because it allowed its truck driver on the road after being awake for allegedly 24 hours. >> people magazine with the first official image of the
3:25 am
ceremony. that is mrs. george clooney looking stunning in her oscar de la renza gown. family and friends celebrated the nuptial in venice. >> one in six men in the united states are affected by prostate cancer and 30,000 men will die from it this year alone. but according to dr. david samadi, women may be our best chance of knocking out the disease once and for all. he's going to explain all that for us this morning. good to see you, doctor. thanks for being here. as september ends and october picks up, women start taking their health pretty seriously when it comes to breast cancer health. you're saying grab the guy you love by the hand and help him get healthy. >> the timing is peskt. we-- perfect. september was all men's health and now women's health in october. we started the samadi
3:26 am
challenge. women go for ma'am graps, go -- mammograms, go for pap spears. now they have one more thing to check out. the p.s.a. we're going to change this forever. i think it's because of women that we go see our doctors. this challenge involves, for example, someone like you, and we're launch it go from right here. it's called samadi challenge. it's women for prostate health. why prostate health and not just prostate cancer? because if the man is getting up in the middle of the night, it is going to interfere with her life. if the libido is down it will affect her. >> 30,000 men this year will die. that is affecting every woman that cares about that man. if found early enough, correct me if i'm wrong, is prostate cancer 100% curable or theeft -- at least preventible to the point they won't die from
3:27 am
it? >> the idea is called list. we want you to learn about the risk. they need to improve the quality of life. screening is extremely important which is a huge part of this. the treatment, we have all the treatments whether it is robotics and other things, which is what i do, it is all out this. i hope you join samadi challenge. start this campaign together from right here on fox news and get all your friends on board. >> i'm going to take the samadi challenge and accept it. why are you asking women to jump in for prostate health? >> i think they are big advocates, very much detail oriented. they go for all their screenings. when they came up with the idea of no mammogram, everyone fought for it. we think different as men. i think if it wasn't because of my wife and family member, i don't think we would go see doctors so i'm glad you're on board. >> i'm on board. think about the guys you love and take the challenge with me. does this look like a passenger to you? one driver a little fuzzy
3:28 am
on the rules about the h.o.v. lane. apparently very legal. from fuzzy bears to fuzzy math, president obama says the economy is the best it's been in decades. but the real numbers tell a different story. in fact, stuart varney is going to praik those -- going to praik those -- break those down next.
3:29 am
well, it's been the number one soup in america.soup? (slurp) (slurp) (slurp) (slurp) for four generations (family laughs) (gong) campbell's! m'm! m'm! good! feet...tiptoeing. better things than the pain, stiffness, and joint damage of moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. before you and your rheumatologist decide on a biologic, ask if xeljanz is right for you.
3:30 am
xeljanz (tofacitinib) is a small pill, not an injection or infusion, for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz can relieve ra symptoms, and help stop further joint damage. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers have happened in patients taking xeljanz. don't start xeljanz if you have any infection, unless ok with your doctor. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz and routinely check certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you have been to a region where fungal infections are common, and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take. one pill, twice daily, xeljanz can reduce ra pain and help stop further joint damage, even without methotrexate. ask about xeljanz.
3:31 am
your shot of the morning. watch this. a middle school football team pulling off a trick play. >> look at him. >> sprints for a touchdown while the other team is trying to figure out what happened. it happened in jefferson city, missouri.
3:32 am
the coach said he modeled it after a scene from the film "the little giant." >> look at that. >> upon further review! >> great job executing that play. >> can you imagine that huddle. kids, i got this great play. let's see. was it from "the bad news bears"? no, "little giant." >> you're back. >> great to see you guys this morning. i've got a story every parent needs to listen to. today there are growing fears about that fast-moving virus that is hospitalizing children in 46 states now. colorado health officials just confirming ten young victims suffering from that respiratory illness have suffered symptoms of paralysis. they are very nervous about it. the children range in age
3:33 am
from 1 to 18. the c.d.c. is investigating to see if that new complication is linked to the virus outbreak. more trouble for the i.r.s. a report shows they botched the collection of taxes. in 2012 the i.r.s. declared $6.7 billion in unpaid taxes and closed the cases when they couldn't find the taxpayer. but in nearly half those cases the i.r.s. workers never tried to track down the person or the money. i.r.s. officials say they're creating a checklist of steps for workers to use in the future. remember the lady who was heaping praise on the obama phone program in the 2012 election? >> he gave us a phone. you sign up, your social security, you got low income, disability. >> it turns out the free cell phone program grew 100-fold in the state of
3:34 am
maryland in three years. as many as 645,000 residents signed up for that program, it doubled the number of those eligible based on income. the f.c.c. instituted reform to try to put a damper on that. washington state patrol pulled over a woman who was speeding in the car pool lane and look at what she found there. once the trooper got closer he noticed this giant teddy bear in the passenger seat. the woman said she didn't have enough room in her van so the bear rode shotgun. she and her bear walked away with an $818 ticket. >> no seat belt on the bear. it's unbelievable. >> guys, thank you. >> 26 minutes before the top of the hour. we've got an extreme weather condition in colorado. temperatures out in colorado dropping more than 20 degrees in a single day.
3:35 am
it's a nasty storm that pummeled denver with heavy rain, golf ball sized hail and even -- there's the hail right there. >> one car dealership says as many as 500 cars on its lot were damaged and hail smashing windows and denting the doors of those vehicles. >> maria, do you have anything to add to this? >> hello, everyone. unfortunately this storm system is going to continue on the move and over the next few days we expect to see more severe weather firing up across parts of the plains. let's show you where we're expecting severe weather today. across parts of south dakota and also into northeastern parts of nebraska. that risk is going to continue tomorrow across portions of the plains and also as we head into thursday. and every day we have that potential for damaging winds, some large hail and also tornadoes with this storm system. temperatures ahead of it are very warm, feeling like summer across parts of texas into parts of kansas, the 80's and 90's out this.
3:36 am
behind that system a lot of cooler. in missoula only in the 50's. that storm eventually is going to make its way eastward over the next few days, eventually making it to parts of the east coast by the end of the week. let's head back inside. >> thanks for the fox cast, maria. >> 24 minutes before the top of the hour. president obama claiming you're probably better off now that he's been in office. >> i can put my record against any leader around the world in terms of digging ourselves out of a terrible, almost unprecedented financial crisis. ronald reagan used to ask the question, are you better off than you were four years ago? in this case are you better off than you were in six? the answer is the country is definitely better off than we were when i came into office. >> do you think you can convince people they're doing fine economically? >> hopefully they get a
3:37 am
chance to hear the argument. i'm presenting the facts. >> do the numbers match up? here is stuart varney. he's right. we were losing a lot of jobs, we had problems with major banks and car companies. >> let's look at the facts, balance the spin from the president against reality on the ground. household income, since the moment the president walked into the white house until now, household income is down $1,800. that is median household income. that is middle america, middle-income earners hess money. >> maybe he wasn't talking about that part. whob -- what about workers? far more part time jobs. far fewer full-time jobs. >> maybe he wasn't talking about that. >> how about general prosperity level of society? look at food stamp ps, please. 21 million people getting
3:38 am
food stamps when he walks into the white house. 46 million now. that is not a picture of prosperity. >> you've shown three different metrics and they all look bad. what could he possibly have been talking about? >> he raised the issue of ronald reagan, just stuck president reagan right into the conversation there. if you go back to ronald reagan, you will see that on occasion, in one month president reagan with his policies -- very different from president obama's -- he created 1.1 million new jobs, full-time jobs in one month. that was september of 1983. >> how? >> he cut taxes and increased demand in society by giving more money for themselves. >> the president says, and it is true, we have record revenue. we are productive, we are generating a lot of revenue in this country. >> do you think that's probably one of the reasons why we have slow yes, indeed, we have record tax revenue. we've never paid so much to the treasury as we are now. that is slowing down the economy. you've only got 2% growth. >> he's saying we're better off. you're just not feeling it.
3:39 am
>> certainly we are not feeling it. and his standards of what is better off don't mean that to the average middle american. >> coming up on varney and company, we're going to be seeing you from 11 to 1:00. >> we're discussing the high school football player who looked like he was handing the ball to the ref and then ran for a touchdown. >> for two hours? >> we cover it all. >> on field and financial facts, stuart varney. thanks. coming up, you thought the home depot security breach was bad, there is another one at the grocery store. >> a bystander with a gun stopped an accused beheading suspect from killing more people. so is it time to rethink the gun control debate in this country? the judge is walking in unarmed. ♪ ♪
3:40 am
3:41 am
3:42 am
3:43 am
welcome back. we have quick consumer headlines for you now. toyota is recalling 690,000 tacoma pickup trucks over fears that they could catch fire. it's a problem with the rear springs. 2005 to 2011 tacoma four by four and prerunner pickups are the ones being recalled. >> hackers may have stolen personal credit card numbers and other data from thousands of people who shop at supervalue and albertson stores. the hack took place in late august and early september. albertson saying the stolen data could include account numbers, stolen expiration dates and card holder names. >> it's the quick-thinking act cops are calling heroic. listen to this. >> can you hear this in the
3:44 am
background? [inaudible] >> it sounds like he's running around. >> okay. >> that's a gunshot. >> police say those gunshots fired by matthew vaughn stopped the oklahoma beheading suspect alton nolen from hurting even more people. with yet another example of how guns save lives, why does president obama and his administration continue to wage a war on the second amendment? joining us right now is fox news senior judicial analyst judge andrew napolitano. judge, when we started telling this story about how this guy allegedly beheaded one person and was in the act of beheading the second person, when the president of that company came in and shot him twice, i said that guy's a hero. but i don't see any other stations covering this. >> put aside the philosophical, the constitutional and the legal arguments about guns, that guy is the president
3:45 am
of the company. he's wearing a uniform he wears part time as a part-time sherrifs officer. as a part-time sherrif's officer he's licensed to carry a gun. in that state it's very easy to carry a gun. >> oklahoma. >> he learns what is happening at his place, he goes out. he sees one of his employees attempting to slaughter another of his employees. he shoots the slaughtererer. the practical argument and those of us who argue for the right to keep and bear arms, it has encrusted in public view. more guns equals less crime. why? because the bad guys fear reactive violence from the victim or someone around the victim more than they fear getting caught. they all think they can get away. but if they think the victim or someone around the victim has a gun, that will give them pause or at least stop them in their
3:46 am
tracks as happened here. >> how many times have we had the conversation on this program where after a horrific shooting regardless of where it was, a movie theater, school, shopping mall, something like that, if somebody had a gun and taken a shot at the shooter that whole thing might have stopped sooner. >> if the pilots on 9/11 had been allowed to carry guns that awful tragedy might never have happened. the problem is the president of the united states who is doing everything he can administratively as the chief executive officer of the federal government and attempting to now get us to enact a treaty to make it very, very difficult to carry guns. he's told doctors, ask your patients if they have guns. he's told the state, ask people when they get registered for guns what their race is. what business is it of the government what race i am? >> is that to intimidate people? >> to intimidate people out of getting guns because the president believes that he and the government can keep
3:47 am
us safer than we can keep ourselves. >> if barack obama could, he would ban guns in the hands of everybody except the police? >> he has made that patently clear. his problem is the second amendment. and the supreme court interpretations of it. >> you go back about a year and a half ago in january of 2013, there were 23 executive actions -- that's the stuff you've got to pen and he's got a phone, which he did his best to try to limit the uses of guns. >> these things i mentioned to you. >> 23 in one month. >> yes. the states now have to collect racial information. doctors are supposed to ask if you have a gun in the house. he ordered that. it's not in the law and it's not enacted by congress. it is a decision made by the president of the united states through the powers that he has abused. >> the take-aways from what happened, that horrific murder down in oklahoma it
3:48 am
the vaughn corporation, perhaps the president of that company stopped other people from being killed because he was armed legally. >> if more people were legally armed there would be less violence, period, whether it is monsters trying to destroy us or a crock pot in the workplace or a nut -- a crackpot in the workplace or nut job on the street. >> if you want a discount, you better bring a gun. the restaurant that wants its customers packing heat. you've got a feeling nobody is going to try anything there. it's the hit everybody is talking about. did the university of michigan coach make a bad call by leaving his q.b. in the game and should the coach be fired? two nfl stars weigh in next. ♪ ♪
3:49 am
3:50 am
3:51 am
3:52 am
. this tough hit you're about to see for the michigan be quarterback leaves him staggering, but the coach left him in the game. now there are calls for the coach to be fired. is it because he's 0-3 or is this just too egreengious for anybody to deal with? >> best selling author of a new book, first team, tim group, and rashard jennings, thanks for
3:53 am
being here. this story has everyone talking. should this coach be fired? whose responsibility is to keep the blaplayer safe? >> from a player standpoint, whenever we sustain a type of injury, our first initial adrenalin attitude is i'm fine, put me in the game. >> i think they're calling for his job because he's 0-3 and he has some historic losses. they lost to minnesota which hasn't happened very often in michigan's history. it's really not a coach's job. it's a medical staff's job. a player will always try to get himself back on the field. if the medical staff says he's okay, then the coach has every right to get him back in there. >> this is an exciting time. we know about the program forto the time kids exercising. but talk about why you're here.
3:54 am
>> so every knows play 60, exercise 60 minutes a day. great for the body, great for their minds. in my travel since i've been writing these middle school age books, i've found educators away t around the country, teachers, parents are trying to get kids to read 20 minutes a day. if they do, they get smarter and more compassionate. so i went to the league and said you're doing this great job to get kids play 60, and let's add to it. take one of my books, we'll get a great player, i didn't know it would be rashard, but we'll go to the school, we'll play for 60, read for 20 and give the kids some books. >> both of you are so well-known for your skill, but to do this and add to it, have the read 20, that's phenomenal. rashard, why is this a
3:55 am
difference maker? >> for me, i've had to overcome a lot of giants in my life to now become a giant. and one of the things growing up, i had a reading comprehension deficit. and so reading was something that was a struggle for me. i had a 0.6 gpa average. i was a little overweight. chubb chubby kid with asthma and glasses. and reading, exercise, that's a part of my brand of who i am. so i want to -- every tuesday in the community, i always dedicated an hour or two to go be a part of the community and be a motivational speaker about how much reading is important. >> and you have a rare combination. all-american at number one pick played at atlanta, at the same time you go pack to law school and building an author. tell me about first team. this is targeted towards the kids you're speaking to today in new jersey. >> yeah, so it's my 14th book for kids.
3:56 am
and it's a story about a kid who is a new kid in town, he's got it tough, he comes from the other side of the tracks. and he's got to persevere. really a story about perseverance and what he has to overcome to get himself on the first team. it's a great football story. page turner. and so when rashard and i are read to go the kiing to the kidg to take these books and go on from there. what a powerful message from someone with the giantse sgiant. >> it's now on sale. first team. thanks so much. by the way, for the record, you did outdress him. >> thanks, guys. >> thanks for having us. coming up, isis caught everyone wouldby surprise. troubling new report straight ahead. and joel osteen is here with a big announcement and answeri d
3:57 am
faith. send them our way. the pastor is in.
3:58 am
goodnight. goodnight. for those kept awake by pain the night is anything but good. introducing new aleve pm. the first one with a safe sleep aid. plus the 12 hour strength of aleve for pain relief that can last until the am.
3:59 am
now you can have a good night and a... good morning! new aleve pm for a better am.
4:00 am
good morning. it's september 30. a fox you news alert for you. a missing real estate agent found dead buried alive in a shallow grave. what police though about this man who showed up at the last appointment she ever made. meanwhile the president blames bad intel for the rise of isis and now the correction or clarification the white house backtracks one day after blaming. after blaming for the rise isis. anyway, we'll tell you what it all means coming up. and you need inspiration this morning? pastor joel osteen here to
4:01 am
answer your e-mails. i've never seen him in a bad mood or not smiling because mornings are better with friends. welcome to the second hour of fox and friends on this tuesday. elizabeth when you enter viewed the son of the real estate agent, everybody was holding out hope. >> and today our hearts sinking. police confirming that they found the body buried alive. heather has the developing details. >> our hearts out to that family. police say they found the real to realtor's body in a shallow
4:02 am
grave lend a concrete mixing business where the suspect aaron lewis actually used to work. investigators made the grim discovery after grilling lewis for 12 hours. we're told he admitted to kidnapping beverly carter, but he did not reveal her whereabouts. at 9:00 a.m., the 33-year-old will make his first court appearance. police arrested almost after he was recognized at a shopping center in little rock. >> guy ran off and we just took off after him. my buddy followed him around one way and i went the other way to make sure he couldn't double back. and the realtors that worked in that shopping center were running behind us and running with us. and we all got him cornered in the office building. >> yes, they did. yesterday carter's son joined us with this emoitional message. >> you're my rock. you're my very first friend.
4:03 am
and i love you so, so much. and i need you. our family needs you. and i want you to be strong. we will find you. >> so hard to watch that knowing that they had that hope yesterday. and then today, this is what happens. >> certainly not i think what everyone was thinking. a ton of hope i i did feel from his interview yesterday. and it's so sad to hear this. thank you for bringing us those details devastating as they are. >> and mean time, we have some headlines now. heather has the fox news alert. >> overnight in australia, a 23-year-old man is charged with funding terrorism. australian authorities say the melbourne suspect gave $12,000 to a u.s. citizen who is fighting alongside isis and also provided funds to the al qaeda linked group al nusra. this is a week after melbourne police fatally shot a terror suspect who stabbed two police
4:04 am
officers. police say that the two incidents are not connected. back here at home, a shocking new report about this month's major white h could police searching for hannah graham be dealing with a serial killer? new details linking jesse the matthew to the disappearance and dw death of a second young woman and there could be more. he could be linked to the death of 20-year-old virginia tech
4:05 am
student morgan harrington. matthew was arrested last week in the disappearance of graham. she's a student at the yf university of virginia. parents of morgan harrington told police that he hopes hannah will be found. >> we know where morgan is. morgan is in a box over there. hannah graham is still missing and her family needs to know where she is. we need to bring hannah home. >> if that forensic evidence holds up, there is likely a third victim linked to matthew. he's due in court on thursday. and photographic evidence that george clooney is officially off the market. "people" magazine with a first look at the italian wedding ceremony. she looks stunning. new york "post" also showing off the custom made dress. osca oscar dela ren take looking on from the right. and this one saying
4:06 am
internationally acclaimed barrister marys anningcton. there is an estimate the wedding cost $13 million. >> he's got if.acton. there is an estimate the wedding cost $13 million. >> he's got if. >> did they register? >> because they need so many things. it's just an empty house. do you know, yesterday at this time, we were telling you about how the president of the united states on 60 interes 0 m talked about the fact that isis has gotten so big. in fact reportedly one mile from baghdad. well, the president said our intel community simply underestimated things. he threw them under the bus. as it turns out, maybe he, the president, actually was missing it because according to the government accountability institute, the president only
4:07 am
attended 42% of his daily intel briefings. that's where they tell him where the hot spots are. so if he only shows up 42% of the time, he'll be missing a lot. but he does say he reads and goes through them. >> how do we know he actually reads them? >> so is he going through it, others is said he's a lawyer, he prefers it that way. eli lake writes that his sources at the defense department are flabbergasted by the president's shifts of blame. others are speaking out. including people that say just read the testimony from past senate committee meetings. lieu ten michael flynn saying in february iraq seems to be exhibiting large sections of isis through both regioregionst february iraq seems to be
4:08 am
exhibiting large sections of isis through both regions. >> the writing was on the wall. everybody knew about it and they were telling the president, but he did nothing. >> ed henry was asking where is the accountability and why so much blaming. >> why did he use the word "they." why didn't he say we? isn't jim clapper part of the president's team? >> of course he is. the president has confidence in director clapper. >> so everybody in the u.s. government was surprised at that, nobody failed, nobody will be held accountable? >> well, predicting the will of security forces to fight for their country is difficult. >> it's difficult except the intel community said, look, we were giving the president and the white house detailed stuff before the election. remember, before the election, that's when we heard osama bin laden is dead and al qaeda is on the run. well, as we know, that their difference simply wasn't holding up. what is also curious is just the
4:09 am
fact that you've got people like lieutenant colonel alan west, he's wondering given the tact that there seems to be no accountability, should somebody intel community elsewhere, should somebody's head roll? listen to this. >> how does lois lerner keep her job? how does nanyone keep their job in the veteran's administration? no one is responsible. we continue to see these failures. these misunderstandings. these missteps. and no one is ever responsible. how does eric holder keep his job after fast and furious? how does anyone keep their job when we abandon four americans to die this benghazi? that's the million dollar question. fox news alert now. a live look here. this is aaron lewis, the map
4:10 am
accused of murdering realtor beverly carter, making his way back to jail. we're told he was just in an investigation building. >> let's see if we can hear what he's saying. okay. the door just closed. he was talking to the reporter as he was getting into the car. >> yeah, he is set to be arraigned in just a couple of hours. apparently he was arrested and he was interrogated for i think 12 hours. at that point, he did admit that he kidnapped the real estate a little by the name of beverly carter. however, he did not admit that he murdered her. whatever he did tell the cops, though, they were then able to go and locate her body overnight. >> he'll make his court appearance 9:00 a.m. eastern.
4:11 am
this is after he's recognized at that shopping center. >> so there you have aaron lewis, the perp walk. >> and just to wrap it up, alan west saying if you believe that the national intelligence director again dropped the ball when it comes to isis, why doesn't anyone lose their job. either you're all in it together or it's time to revamp everything. >> and is 42% attendance rate at the intel meetings good enough for you as you're hearing that the president -- that those are the ones that he attended. apparently 60% of the time, he opted out of sitting face to face getting information. maybe a little curiosity would have helped. >> and 60 minutes did two thirds of their program on the president of the united states. their ratings were actually down according to nielsen. 69% from the week before. was it because of football or was it because people didn't want to hear what the president had to say? don't know. >> but they're usually up
4:12 am
because when the lead-in is football, they usually sky rocket it. in the east anyway, they run late. meanwhile coming up straight ahead, did the man accused of kidnapping uva student hannah graham did this before? police say evidence may show that exactly happened. the country's top forensic pathologist here next. and the government wants to spend more money on food stamps so people eat better. how much will that cost us? we have some numbers as we roll on live from new york city.
4:13 am
know that chasing performance can mean lower returns and fewer choices in retirement. know that proper allocation could help increase returns so you can enjoy that second home sooner. know the right financial planning can help you save for college and retirement. know where you stand with pnc total insight. a new investing and banking experience with personalized guidance and online tools. visit a branch, call or go online today. today, more and more people with type 2 diabetes
4:14 am
are learning about long-acting levemir®, an injectable insulin that can give you blood sugar control for up to 24 hours. and levemir® helps lower your a1c. levemir® is now available in flextouch® - the only prefilled insulin pen with no push-button extension. levemir® lasts 42 days without refrigeration. that's 50% longer than lantus®, which lasts 28 days. today, i'm asking about levemir® flextouch. (female announcer) levemir® is a long-acting insulin, used to control high blood sugar in adults and children with diabetes and is not recommended to treat diabetic ketoacidosis. do not use levemir® if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. the most common side effect is low blood sugar, which may cause symptoms such as sweating, shakiness, confusion, and headache. severe low blood sugar can be serious and life-threatening. ask your doctor about alcohol use, operating machinery, or driving. other possible side effects include injection site reactions.
4:15 am
tell your doctor about all medicines you take and all of your medical conditions. check your blood sugar levels. your insulin dose should not be changed without asking your doctor. get medical help right away if you have trouble breathing, swelling of your face, tongue or throat, sweating, extrconfusion. (male announcer) today's the day to ask your doctor about levemir® flextouch. covered by nearly all health insurance and medicare plans.
4:16 am
a major break in the disappearance of 18-year-old missing uva student hannah graham. police now saying that they found forensic evidence linking her abduction to the murder of 20-year-old uva student morgan harrington. harrington's death already linked to a 2005 sexual assault on a 26-year-old woman who managed to escape. so could the man suspected in grant's kidnapping be behind a number of other crimes? we'll ask our forensics pathologist just that. when you heard this connection,
4:17 am
where did your mind go? >> they said forensic evidence. probably dna is important in the three linklinkages. but they may have found when they searched his apartment and his car evidence for other women, a half dozen young women missing in the charlottesville area over the past few years, so they may have found something that connects him to other women also that are still missing. and they're looking for everybody. >> sure. hannah graham is the fifth to disappear in five years along that route 29 corridor. where do you go next with this? >> i think that the police are analyzing whether the information they have from the last victim, however there may be other information that they can get that is available that would connect them to other victims, too. and they haven't found where the last victim is.
4:18 am
hopefully she's alive. probably not. >> are you saying that in terms of finding -- you're saying other evidence meaning pieces of clothing? >> jewelry. >> if this is something he's done a number of times, are you saying he would have many collections from these women? >> many serial murderers collect trophies. they have clothing or jewelry that they keep. and that they keep in their residences. nobody ever looks for it there unless something like this comes up. in this instance, they have him for a warrant for murder, abduction, kidnapping and sexual assault. we can find convictions when you don't have a body for murder, but very difficult to do a sexual assault conviction without a body. >> sure. they do have a sketch. tell me what you think about this. a number of people have said
4:19 am
this is pretty close. >> yeah. they're reasonably close. i think it's reasonably close. but that's a sketch going back to 2005, which is interesting. of course could be. but i'm not persuaded by this sketch. >> so this is not evidence that you say could actually -- >> the sketch isn't going to work. >> do you notice a pattern at all? this location is pretty much all we need in terms of saying too many women in this area have gone missing, not returned home. >> that's right. and all college student age women. so virginia police have been looking for these women for quite a while. only the past four or five years. so he could be a serial murderer and they have to find more evidence to make that conclusion. >> your instinct has played such a role in your career. what is it telling you?
4:20 am
>> he sounds a little like ted bundy. very attractive it, arreticulat person who picks up college women. he went on liberty university. he was a very personable person. >> well, he certainly has everyone thinking. our hearts are with the families still looking. >> this isn't over yet. >> thank you, doctor. well, coming up, are you looking for a it tit i discount? the restaurant that wants hits customers packing heat. plus need inspiration this morning? we have some. pastor joel osteen is walking in live right now answering your e-mails. keep them coming.
4:21 am
at od, whatever business you're in, that's the business we're in with premium service like one of the best on-time delivery records and a low claims ratio, we do whatever it takes to make your business our business. od. helping the world keep promises. could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. everybody knows that. well, did you know you that former pro football player ickey woods will celebrate almost anything? unh-uh. number 44... whoooo! forty-four, that's me! get some cold cuts... get some cold cuts... get some cold cuts! whooo! gimme some! geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. whoo! forty-four ladies, that's me! whoo...gonna get some cold cuts today!
4:22 am
4:23 am
4:24 am
$31.5 million is how much teach has in his savings. kidding. that's how much the usda is giving to food stamps so years can buy fruits and vegetables. they claim it will help lower health care costs in the long run. 10% is the discount you will get at one day january hot spcajun louisiana. and $81 billion, the net worth of bill gates. forbes out with its richest
4:25 am
people list. meanwhile, joel osteen is at the helm of america's largest megachurch. its uplifting sermon seen by nearly 10 million viewers each and every week. >> and now he's launching a new channel on sirius xm and his latest book, you can, you will. he joins us this morning. and of course you brought your smile. >> great to be with you all. >> it's great to have you here. congratulations on the radio. >> thank you. i can't believe it happened. >> where can we listen? >> it's on sirius xm channel 128. it's a 24 hour channel. my message is from services and things leake that. >> you're just a couple other from fox news. i think we're at 114. we asked earlier if anybody watching had a question for you. and it turns out thousands do.
4:26 am
you should use this for your radio show. >> so any way, here is a question from theresa. she wrote on facebook, how do we know which direction god is sending us? we are going through a rough period and praying for his guidance. >> sometimes, theresa, it's the difficult, but i think you just have to search your heart and follow the peace on the inside. and you have to pray. justed for op ed fogod open thed close the wrong doors. if you honor god, he will close the wrong doors and give you direction. but sometimes you have to figure out is this my will or god's will. but if you are a pure heart, god will help you. in how do you know which in. >> how do you know which is the wrong doors to close? >> i pray god close the doors for me. five year ago, i felt it wasn't the right time and six months ago, it all fell into place. so god, it's your timing. sometimes we try to knock doors
4:27 am
open. i'm all for being persistent, but sometimes you have to say this may not be the right thing for this time. isn't moean it's closed forever. >> and peace is an indicator. and charlie wrote how can i get past the grief of losing my mom. >> it's difficult. i think you have to take it a day at a time. sometimes you think how can i go on another six months or are another year. but god doesn't ask you to. he says can you go on 24 more hours. so you have to get up and say god, i'm asking you for strength today and you just have to remember the good memories. i remember twhwhen i lost high , my dad, i thought the same thing. w45 i thought was the darkest hour when i lost my dad, if launched me into what i'm doing now. of course i miss my father, but it laufrnched me into something even better. >> what about somebody who hasn't experienced grief before?
4:28 am
you're questioning god already, but what you've never had a relationship and you don't have faith? >> i think it's hard without faith. that's why i encourage people in those tough times, it's a time to turn to god. you don't have to be a religious type person. a lot of people weren't raised in church like me. but you call out on god. he has a purpose for our life. i don't believe anything we go through is a surprise to him. and it may feel odd, but you have to say god help me. i believe he will give and you peace and strength and help you get through these times. >> and he gave jeter that hit in yankee stadium. how do you stay so positive? >> you you know, i don't know. this has been my natural personality. i do believe i live what i teach. and when i ask other people to do, i get up and foond something to be grateful for. i think we can all find something. >> something that is good. >> it's how you start the day many times will determine how your day will go. it's easy to think i don't want to go to work, i don't want to
4:29 am
deal with these kids. >> sounds like elizabeth oig every day. >> you knew you were coming on fox and friends, is that what made you happy? >> seeing you guys -- >> was it about the radio deal, the book deal? >> have to get through this. >> he's eight undeniable qualities, one is serve others. why is that important? >> because sometimes when you get only focused on yourself, i will you tend to lose your joy. i don't know. just the victory in life. i think we were created to help others, to do something good for somebody else. and when it's always my dreams, my goals, my plans, even my problems, it's self centered. and when you reach out and to something for somebody else, it brings you joy and it's a seed you sow for help in your own time of need. >> once again on xm, over there later today at what channel? >> channel 128. >> you got yourself an hour show, your wife has an hour show and then it's up to everybody
4:30 am
else. congratulations. >> thank you. you're a joy to be with. >> you can you will is the name of the book. meanwhile, we have to go to a break. >> next up on the are nrundown, moment a volcano çerupts, caug on camera. >> and teachers refusing to work because they say schools are too conservative. what about the kids?
4:31 am
ok who woh, i do!t rolls? (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) thanks carol! (electric hedge trimmer) everybody loves the sweet, fluffy deliciouslness of king's hawaiian bread.
4:32 am
4:33 am
just take a closer look. with a fidelity investment professional... or managing your investments on your own. helping you find new ways to plan for retirement. and save on taxes where you can. so you can invest in the life that you want today. tap into the full power of your fidelity greenline. call or come in today for a free one-on-one review.
4:34 am
fox news alert. brand new video in of the man suspected of murdering missing arkansas real estate agent beverly carter spoke out just moments ago as he's being led past cameras with police. >> you did not? >> no. >> who did? >> i had a co-defendant. i haven't seen her for into dtw. i haven't seen her. i had a co-defendant trevor. >> what is your relationship to trevor? >> he got texts back and forth from me and him and they want him -- >> why beverly? >> she was a rich broker. >> might go to sanything to say family? >> sorry. >> what else? >> sorry. >> why beverly? >> because she was just a woman that worked alone, a rich broker. >> did you kill her?
4:35 am
>> no. >> a rich broker. he was able to answer questions like that. set to make his first court appearance in an hour and a half. police found her body in a shallow grave. >> about 25 miles from the house where she was reportedly showing him near little rock. investigators made the grim discovery after grilling him for over 12 hours. >> so he implicated himself and now they're maybe just throwing out a name? >> he apparently did tell police that he was involved in the kidnapping, but didn't say he was involved in the murder. and now we just learned in that sound bite that there was some other guy named trevor with apparently ex-military. i'm sure police are looking for him. unless they already have him. quite a story out of arkansas. >> we'll stay on those details. it is a security shocker here. the intruder who scared the white house fence and spreptsed
4:36 am
into presidential mansion made it much parts inside than we were told initially. let's go live in washington. leland, what is the reaction at the white house this morning? this is a shocking update. >> good morning. certainly there are a lot of questions folks are asking about exactly what happened. one source told ed henry that this was a catastrophic failure. for more than a week, we have known that when omar gonzalez climbed over the white house fence and dashed across the laup, lauwn he made it to the front door, but turns out he made it well into the white house, through the east room and then into the green room. you see his route there on the map. that puts him at the heart of the executive mansion before another agent was able on tackle him and the source tells ed a member of the secret services uniform division originally misreported these details to town play the failure.
4:37 am
>> i'm not surprised here because it was only a matter of time given the jurisdictional mess in front of the white house and the constant pressure on the secret service to maintain optics, it was only a matter of time before someone did that. >> in recent weeks, there has been a massive show of force by the secret service around the white house ground. the investigation continues. including a new mini fence. although what that would did to stop an intruder is unclear and a number of fail you are urfail. today secret service head will be testifying on capitol hill. and it will not exactly be a comfortable conversation. >> lee land, thank you. and we're hearing this, one 18 # 0 rounds of ammunition found in the car.
4:38 am
>> and plus the story the "washington post" had a couple days ago about how apparently how one guy on the south lawn pumped seven shots in the white house and nobody knew until the maid found broken glass. >> number one question asked today, is the first family safe. because that's what they're there for. >> they thought the shots were a car backfiring. meanwhile, heather has the news. >> good morning. news coming in from overseas. a group of hikers forced to take cover in a cabin after a japanese volcano erupts without warning. 36 people were killed when mt. ontake kree ruperupted. now some of the ash is as deep as 21 feet. yesterday the search was called off due to high levels of toxic gas. but rescue operations have now resumed. nearly 70% of teachers
4:39 am
shutting down two high schools in colorado by calling in sick, protesting the school board's proposal to promote patriotism. and also and ongoing disagreement over pay. >> the public is getting angry. >> i think it's sad that the union bosses are using our kids to be uninformed, basically pawns. >> protests been going on for about three week. the super iteachers who conditi prove they are sick will be docked pay. bill and hillary have cleared their schedules for bonding time with chelsea and new baby.
4:40 am
remember those days? >> a special day. >> read the directions on how to bu put the baby seat in. meanwhile, exsfretreme weat in colorado. temperatures dropping more than 20 degrees this just one day as snow is in the central mountain real regions. >> and some places reporting hail as large as quarters coming down. maria has the latest. >> that's right. and the storm also packing a punch in terms of severe weather. we had a tornado reported yesterday across western colorado and also several reports of strong winds and hail. and you now today we have the risk for more of that across south toddakota. nebraska. tomorrow we continue to see the risk for tornadoes for strong winds, for hail. temperatures ahead of the storm system are very warm.
4:41 am
feel like summer across the plains and northeast. it will be cooler today, new york city temperatures returning closer to average into the low 70s. and places like chicago, cleveland and minneapolis will be in the 60s. >> it won't rain today in new york, is it? >> we have unsettled weather here in the northeast. all because of that cooldown. >> good reason not to paint the garage door then. i'll wait. >> have the butler to it like last year. they took on obamacare and won. president of hobby lobby here for his first tv interview next. (vo) watching. waiting.
4:42 am
for that moment, where right place meets right time. and when i find it- i go for it. (announcer) at scottrade, we share your passion for trading. that's why we give you the edge, with innovative charting and trading features, plus powerful mobile apps so you're always connected, wherever you are. because at scottrade, our passion is to power yours.
4:43 am
4:44 am
we know in the cyber world, threats are always evolving. at first, we were protecting networks. then, we were protecting the transfer of data. and today it's evolved to infrastructure... ♪ ...finance... and military missions. we're constantly innovating to advance the front line in the cyber bate, wherever it takes us. that's the value of performance. northrop grumman. tomorrow marks three years since obamacare launched, but hobby lobby won a land mark supreme court rule you iing giv the right to opt out of offering
4:45 am
certain contraceptives. hobby lobby's president steve green join us there oklahoma city. good morning. >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> i know this is the first time you've talked nationally since the decision. at the time, before the decision came out, did you ever think, you know, maybe we shouldn't do this, it's costing us a lot of money, the family's getting dragged through the press, it's just not worth? >> no, not really. i think when our family met, we knew that to provide the mandated contraceptions that would take life was something that violated our conscio skepgd we felt leak we didn't have an option. >> you were paying for 16 of 20 different kinds of birth control, but it was those four that you caused life on he saen
4:46 am
that's where he said we can't pay for that. >> contraception has never been the problem. 16 of the 20, we have and we did provide. but it's those products that could take life that became a problem for us. and those are the ones that we did that want to freely provide because it violated our con shenks. >> did it drive you crazy when people said hobby lobby had a war on women? >> especially when we have such a great appreciation for employee, many of them women, we want to take care of them, provide the best we can, health insurance that we can for them. so there was just a lot of misconception and misconstruing of what our position was. and that was discouraging. but i guess that's what you have to expect. >> sure. well, now the supreme court has said you don't have to pay for that and you have moved on. and you've moved on because
4:47 am
coming up, not long, you will be breaking ground officially on the national bible museum. and you've selected of all locations washington, d.c.. why this washingtin washington? >> we had looked at three major metra poo poll tapolitan areas. new york city, washington, d.c. and dallas. but we did a survey that showed that the museum would be best intended in washington, d.c.. so we focused our efforts there and it took about 18 months for us to find a location that we acquired. but because of the fact that we saw that d.c. would be where it would be best attended, that's why we focused there. >> so it's a guy began tick nig dedicated to one book. so how do you make it interesting for all generations because sometimes it's hard to engage the kids?
4:48 am
>> it is a book that has changed a world. and so when you look at the impact of this book, it's one of those that has an incredible story to be told. and so what we have done is we engaged leading designers, architec architects, technology experts to help us make this a very engaginging new se engaging museum that will help bring the book alive and hope the visitor have a greater appreciation for the book once they have gone through it. >> so if you're thinking if we build it, they will come. >> well, our survey indicated that there would be a great interest. there is a great love in our nation for this book. there are people that love it and there are those that hate it. and what we want to is just present the information, let a visitor make their own choice of what they want to do with the information. but this book has had such an impact, we ought to know about it. so we want to let people know about the book that has impacted their life. >> steve green, thank you very much for joining us from oklahoma city telling us about the national bible museum to
4:49 am
open up in a couple years in d.c.. >> thank you. up next, looking for a job? there is one industry that wants you. top five companies hiring coming up. 'wóóñt
4:50 am
4:51 am
4:52 am
each week fox and frnd fri brings you top companies hiring and one industry always on the list are fitness companies. >> so here is all the information you you need to get hired. >> 13% growth in the fitness industry, that is what the expectations are. there are jobs never single part. so how do you break into the
4:53 am
fitness industry. you're expanding across the country? >> yes. we're hoping about 150 additional locations across north america in the next 36 months. >> so who are you looking for, what kind of jobs do you have available? >> salespeople, eninstructor, and additional franchisees. and we're doing national expansion. every state and canada. >> you can give me a salary range? >> our salary for employees make $12 to $20 an hour and franchisees can make up to six figures. >> i'll let you get back to supervising some tough martial arts. i'll go on to another company and this is retrofitness. this is a company that i've talked about before. ed is the ceo. first tell me about retrofit
4:54 am
ths. what do you offer to your customers? >> we do fitness at an affordable price. it's $19.99 a month. we have group fitness. we're loaded to the gills with equipment. >> 30 minute class? >> we have some 30 minute classes. >> what kind of jobs do you have available? >> this year along, we'll open up 30 to 40 gyms. plus the exponential factors. >> and you're opening up here in man manhattan. >> yes, 1 new york plaza. and then we'll did florida, texas, carolina, just exploding nation wide. >> i got to tell you, this looks tough. i'm a little intimidated. i'll be honest. before i start high workout, i always like to to a littdo a li kick boxing.
4:55 am
nine rounds is the company. and you're expanding across the country. you yourself are quite the light weight fighter. >> europe, can in a today, world title. i started a fitness program and we have 155 stores in 36 states. >> what kind of jobs do you have open? >> we're looking for trainers that are passion that tate abo t fitness. >> and what do you pay? >> anywhere it $8 and $15 and managers $30,000 to $50,000 a year and we love that we did. >> and looking pretty tough. i'll let you get back to the fighting. finally, new york sports club, boston sports club. you're director of group exercise. let's first talk about your about pan expansion. you've been growing. >> 40 years we've been this business. so it's really exciting.
4:56 am
we have 160 clubs in the northeast. major metropolitan areas. new york is our largest market, but we're also in washington sports clubs, boston sports clubs and philadelphia. >> and we have a group fitness class going behind us. but you're looking for instructors. >> we'll probably 100 to 200, but also 150 personal trainers, some management and some membership consultants, as well. >> so if you want to get in shape, you want to make some hone at the same time, look as good as these ladies, it's a big growth industry. back to you in the studio. >> i'm exhausted just watching. it's noisy out there. meanwhile coming up, a full hour coming your way. >> are we at war with isis or not? state department spokesperson jen psaki joins us live to answer that question and many more.
4:57 am
plus the queen of cooking is back in action and it's a family affair. paula deen and her sons here live.
4:58 am
at od, whatever business you're in, that's the business we're in. with premium service like one of the best on-time delivery records and a low claims ratio, we do whatever it takes to make your business our business. od. helping the world keep promises. that's the way i look at life. looking for something better. especially now that i live with a higher risk of stroke due to afib, a type of irregular heartbeat, not caused by a heart valve problem. i was taking warfarin, but wondered if i kept digging, could i come up with something better.
4:59 am
my doctor told me about eliquis... for three important reasons. one, in a clinical trial, eliquis was proven to reduce the risk of stroke better than warfarin. two, eliquis had less major bleeding than warfarin. and three, unlike warfarin, there's no routine blood testing. don't stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. those three important reasons are why eliquis is a better find for me. ask your doctor today if eliquis is right for you.
5:00 am
missing real estate act found dead in a shallow grave. >> why beverly? >> she was a rich broker. >> the breaking details on that straight ahead. meanwhile the president blamed bad intel for the rise of isis. and this morning we may know it may have actually been no intel at all because the president missed over half of his intel briefings. queen of cooking is back in action. and it's a family affair. paula deen and her sons are here
5:01 am
live and making our studios smelling very, very nice. she's our friend and as you know, mornings are better with friends. that's right. paula deen is actually in the stud studio. she's coming up. she's back. she's so comfortable here, she was just checking our scripts. are they okay? >> anybody that can mile and talk at the same time -- >> you admire the women. >> you look great. we're so glad you're here. >> we have a busy final hour. jen psaki will be talking and right now we're talking to
5:02 am
heather who has the news. >> i have troubling news to bring you out of the south. it is a fox news alert. moments ago the man accused of murdering missing real estate agent beverly carter revealing his motives during a live television interview after police found the body of carter buried thin a shallow grave. >> did you kill beverly carter? >> no. i had a co-defendant. i haven't seen her for two days. now they're showing pictures of this. i had a co-defendant trevor. >> what else do you want to say to the family? >> sorry. >> why beverly? >> she was a work that worked alone, a rich broker. >> that happened just a few minutes ago. we'll keep watching that story. another fox news alert, the hunt
5:03 am
is now on for a suspect who hit an off duty newark new jersey police officer. the suspect was attempting to steal a car when the officer opened fire. the suspect then fled striking the trooper's suv. the police have located the an ban doned vehicle but have not found the driver. could police searching for than that gra hannah graham be dealing with a serial killer? new details linking jesse matthew to the disappearance and death of a second young woman and there could be more. information if the forensic evidence holds up, there likely a third victim linked to the suspect. so could the the man be behind a in that of other crimes?
5:04 am
dr. boden said this earlier. >> he sounds like ted bundy, attractive, articulate person, picks up college women and ted bundy was a murderer down in florida it ffor many years. but he went to liberty university. he was a very personable person. >> matthew is due in course thursday of this week. and then a bombshell report about this month's major white house security breach. we now know the armed white house intruder made it further than the secret service admitted. he got into the white house, overpowered a secret service officer and ran through the east room. if you follow the red line, he was eventually tackled in the green room where he was tackled by a counterassault agent. that sets the stage for what will be a pretty heated congressional hearing today. secret service director julia
5:05 am
pearson will face lawmakers at 10:00 a.m. this morning. those are your headlines. laura ingram joins us every week. had this guy known where he was running in the white house, he could have run right up the stairs. >> i used to work in the white house and all i can say is as i recall it, and is this back in the last couple years of the reagan administration, the people at the front door were usually fairly large strong individuals. i mean, a little blurry memory, but the idea that this guy could get in and overpower an agent who i guess was female, and there are a lot of female agents who are really strong and large. but you to get the sense at some point that political correctness could have been a factor here. right? because the new female director who will be questioned today came in after the columbia
5:06 am
prostitute scandal. and she will face tough questions. she was a proud civil servant, but you do get the sense with this administration that all these decisions about who gets what position and where they're stationed, it's plit correoliti correct correctness comes in to the decision making. and this is no place for political correctness. >> just lock the damn door. >> i'm actually against locking the door. >> they didn't like the sound. >> are you half surprised that omar gone sal lzalez go down to mess and have lunch? where else could he have gone? the president takes the dog out for a walk. >> unbelievable. >> and surprise seems to be the
5:07 am
word of the day. every is taken by surprise that isis is taking over in the middle east. especially the president. "60 minutes" was the place he decided to go and say that. i'm going to throw intel right under the bus and say they were underestimating how powerful the situation could be really just tossing blame on them. and then saying wait a minute, now we're all surprised? even isis is surprised at their own success perhaps because the president missed nearly half of his daily intelligence briefings. >> well, i wonder how many fundraisers he's missed over the past year. i mean, 50%? i bet not. golf games? probably not. i mean, i don't mean to be snarky, but you have to read your briefings. you have to at least give the appearance that you're engaged in understanding the security threat to our country. but as we've discussed before, i think this president was never all that into foreign policy or
5:08 am
that into military strategy. he was really most motivated by remaking america on the home front. so he's really motivated by stuff like the war on women, contraceptive mandate and remaking the military, did i d y diversity, global warming. he's really into that stuff, but this whole idea of america is facing threats abroad, that is just not really what has ever motivated president obama. and so it doesn't surprise me and i got to tell you, on my radio show yesterday, we went back and got all the clips of obama after bin laden was taken out by s.e.a.l. team 6, he used a lot of is and mys and mes because that was good news about but here, no, they had it wrong. that's a good leader. >> if we want the president to make sure that he gets 100% of his presidential daily briefings, maybe they should give to him on a golf cart.
5:09 am
>> or many just jay-z or beyonce, they could be involved. are they on speed dial? they seem to be able to get attention when they want to get attention. maybe we should bring them into the fold. >> a little disturbing. >> right now we understand between one and five miles from baghdad is isis today. while in syria, forcing the syrian kurds into turkey. so we have not slowed them down. >> no. and i think we have to be very clear the threat to the home front, the threat abroad, what is it, what are we going. we can't keep someone out of our white house apparently. we're going to keep someone from crossing our southern border? maybe omar gonzalez thought mi casa, su casa. i'm just following the example of the thousands that crosseer it a go. >> lock that door, do.
5:10 am
laura, thank you very much. listen to her on stations all across the country. >> have fun with paula deen. >> she's making k450ez bacheese. >> you're lucky. straight ahead, jen psaki will join brian next. >> and pictures inside george clooney's wedding. dad, i know i haven't said this often enough, but thank you. thank you mom for protecting my future. thank you for being my hero and my dad. military families are uniquely thankful for many things, the legacy of usaa auto insurance could be one of them. if you're a current or former military member or their family, get an auto insurance quote
5:11 am
and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. well, it's been the number one soup in america.soup? (slurp) (slurp) (slurp) (slurp) for four generations (family laughs) (gong) campbell's! m'm! m'm! good!
5:12 am
5:13 am
i can face my 3rd grade class trip. tying shoes, fixing pigtails, and chasing after them when their wonder turns to wander. hannah. new tena instadry. designed for those unexpected leaks with 864 tiny funnels to zip wetness away. and even when you twist not a drop escapes. that's fearless protection poise maximum can't match. (teacher) and i can stay perfectly dry. with tena, i'm not afraid.
5:14 am
and you won't be either. call 1-877-get-tena. how did they end up where they are, in control of so much territory? was that a complete surprise to you? >> well, i think our head of the intelligence community, jim clapper, has acknowledged that they underestimated what had been taking place in syria. >> so the president appears to blame the intelligence community for the rise of isis that could not have been information seaee. a new report suggests the president missed half of the briefings. jen psaki joining us.
5:15 am
first off, on the attempt on "60 minutes" on sunday, the president pushing blame for james clapper for not having the intelligence, but it seems at though there was intelligence out there and even michael flynn saying in february in senate testimony, we believe isil or al qaeda in iraq will look to take territory in iraq and syria to exhibit their strength in 2014. so it was out withere. was just not listened to? >> first of all, al qaeda and aqis, they changed their name to isil about a year and a half ago, we've been tracking this group for some people. the president, secretary of state, intelligence community. but there is a difference between that watching a terrorist organization and knowing that the iraqi security forces would lay down their arms, buckle and not fight back. that's an incredibly hard thing to track. and what we've done over the past eight months is increase our assistance to the iraqi
5:16 am
security forces. would he ha we've been providing them with hell fire missiles because we've seen the strength grow. >> and about the president missing over 50% of the intelligence briefings, why would he choose to do that in a world when it's so full of terrorist activity? >> i have no validation of those statistics. i've worked for the president for six years. there are a range of ways that you can get your inintelligence briefings. >> so you don't believe the statistics are right that say he only was at 41% of the entell against briefings? >> well, i think the important thing here to note is that there is information the president receives on a daily basis. there is a range of people that made the decision to increase
5:17 am
assistance, that made the decision to do strikes last week. the president has been lead wgt support of the national security team to take on this threat. and what we should be focused on is what we do moving forward. >> just alarming because about you don't know what you did wrong, how do you move forward effectively. and if the intelligence community was getting it wrong, what has changed. so let's just -- >> i think everyone -- let me make one more point. anyone in the intelligence community will tell you who has worked in the intelligence community, it's nearly impossible to predict that an organization, a like the iraqi security forces, would lay down their arms and not fight back. we knew it was a pbad organization. we didn't know there wasn't going to be a fight back in iraq. >> that's a good point, but if you were monitoring things after we left, you would see all the sunni leaders had been ousted, and with an embassy that large, maybe we should have been able to pick up what was going on there. but about the iraqis laying down
5:18 am
their arms, ramadi and fallujah fell, mosul, are we beginning to see a trend? it looks like it was all falling apart, but it took until september for us to take action. >> i would disagree with that. we have been taking action, putting together a strategy over the last eight months. i think our strategy can't be into air strikes and ask questions later. there is a range of steps we've taken. i've mentioned the hell fire missiles, be inned isr, so intel against sharing. we needed to have a strategy, know where the targets were, know we had a political backup and government that could implement it moving forward. >> acnd probably best news ever to get a new iraqi government in there. but al maliki is still involved. so let's keep our fingers crossed that these guys are more inclusive and less shia oriented. now a new group, and that's
5:19 am
khorasan. they seem to be again special focus because you believe they are a direct threat here. can you tell us what types of plot they have already pulled off to date? >> i can't go into those details for the safety and security honestly of the american people, but i can tell you we've been tracking the khorasan group for about two years. this is affair affiliate of al qaeda, a group we've been watching and that's why we took action. >> one of our premiere al qaeda experts and got the closest to nip to stopping the 9/11 plot said over the weekend that they are core al qaeda. one of people that led them there was one of the few who knew about the 9/11 plot prior to the attack. and he said khorasan is the region where al qaeda lived and they just switched to syria you because there was a gap to be filled. so if core al qaeda still exists, can we no longer say that we decimated core al qaeda? >> i think what you're referring
5:20 am
to i believe is the president's statements that we had decimated core al qaeda and certainly killed osama bin laden. those are all facts. this is the leadership of core al qaeda that has been our focus and was our focus early on over the past couple of years. but what he said in his speech at west point just a few months ago is that terrorism still remains one of the biggest threats to the american people. and we need to take on these threats where they face us, whether that's in yemen, syria. other places. so certainly groups like the co khorasan group, it's part of the effort under way right now. >> but you don't believer they're core al qaeda? >> they're affair affiliate. they're a terrorist organization and that's why we went after them. >> jen, nice for you to be with us. thanks so much. >> thank you. you know him best as ac slater there saved by the bell.
5:21 am
matter i don mario lopez is here dishing his dirt on his life when the cameras were not rolling.
5:22 am
i love having a free checked bag. with my united mileageplus explorer card. i have saved $75 in checked bag fees. priority boarding is really important to us. you can just get on the plane and relax. i love to travel, no foreign transaction fees means real savings. we can go to any country and spend money the way we would in the us. when i spend money on this card i can see brazil in my future. i use the explorer card to earn miles in order to go visit my family which means a lot to me. ♪
5:23 am
trying to mislead you about the effects of proposition 46. well here's the truth: 46 will save lives. it will save money too.
5:24 am
i'm bob pack, and i'm fighting for prop 46 because i lost my two children to preventable medical errors and i don't want anyone else to lose theirs. the three provisions in 46 will reduce medical errors and protect patients. save money and save lives. yes on 46. we have quick entertainment headlines. actually mario lopez should be doing it. walmart is blaming tracy morgan for injuries he suffered in the deadly crash in response to his negligence lawsuit. walmart claims tracy was injured because he was not wearing his seat belt. morgan's lawsuit alleges walmart was negligent in allowing its truck driver on the road for a long period of time perhaps being awake for 24 hours. and here it is, photograph
5:25 am
he can proof, george clooney off the market. first images of the the a-list wedding coming out. and new york "post" getting a look at the bride's oscar de la renta gown. and hello magazine snapping the extremely photogenic newlyweds. mario lopez, how did steve do? >> i thought the he did a fine job. >> congratulations. >> tell us what you know about this wedding. >> i know what you though because they have been so top secret. we had a correspondent over there.they have been so top sec. we had a correspondent over there. george was in an amazing mood. he gave him some gift and tequila. so it was like mardi gras in italy. >> and what a photo-op. even though pictures of the actual ceremony, we haven't really seen many of those, but the stuff out in venice on the grand canal, it being looked like a movie. >> incredibly romantic.
5:26 am
it was quite the scene. wish i could have been there. >> and las vegas justice of the peace as a backup plan. but this is your fifth book out. >> actually six to be honest. but it's my first memoir. and i'm excited about it. i turned 40. i think 40 is a time in a man's life where he sort of pauses and reflects on how he got there and to help make a plan for the future. and i thought what better way than to write it down. >> whether this be a book that you'll be excited for your kids to read? they're little now. >> and i dead indicadicated it and said so you know where your old man came from. >> i didn't see you when you were really young. describe growing up in chula vista. >> it's a border town, not
5:27 am
exactly the most upscale neighborhood. but it was home. my parents blue collar folks. my dad for the city, my mom for the phone company. and my mom's hope was to keep my busy and out of trouble. so i was the only karate, dancing, wrestler that you knew. so it worked. >> you talk about wanting kids to be well rounded. you certainly are. you're very honest. you say just between us, get intimate in term of your life and struggles like in-if i tellity. it says as i learned from many miswh mistakes, not everyone is comfortable with love the one you're with approach about that. >> i own up to all my mistakes. and everybody makes them, right? and i think the important thing is you learn from them. and i've learned in life that no one is perfect and you try to to
5:28 am
the best at the moment. and you move on. and so i think the important thing is that i have learned and ha and i think i'm a better person for it. and it's amazing in writing this how much you forget over the years of your own life. and it was very therapeutic. and very emotional, too. so i'm happy with the way it turned out. and this is for like the people who have watched and supported me throughout the years. because without them, i wouldn't have a career or anything. and that's why i call it just between us. >> do you think that you would have gotten this far had facebook and twitter and all that other social media stuff existed when you were growing up? because you were doing saved by the bell, and there were some things going on. >> thank god tmz and facebook and twitter, up none of that wa around. >> or what would have happened? >> it just would have been some sort of -- you would know a lot
5:29 am
more about me. at the end of the and day, i wa a bad kid. i was close with my family and still am. but i was a young guy and i liked to have fun. >> and when you look at pictures like that -- >> thank you. >> look at that shirt, huh? >> we loved you then, we love you now. it's brave of you to be so honest and open. no one is perfect. this just good us is a great thing to hand down to your kids. and happy birthday. >> thank you very much. >> go out and get the book. it's out today. just between us. meanwhile, coming up, remember this lady. one of the president's biggest fans. >> he's obama president, you though. >> the major fraud just got exposed. and moments ago, jen sapsak
5:30 am
weighed in on the isis threat telling us it's hard to predict exactly what the terror group will do. does senator behilindsaey graha agree? we'll talk to him next. my mother made the best toffee in the world. it's delicious. so now we've turned her toffee into a business. my goal was to take an idea and make it happen. i'm janet long and i formed my toffee company through legalzoom. i never really thought i would make money doing what i love. we created legalzoom to help people start their business and launch their dreams. go to legalzoom.com today and make your business dream a reality. at legalzoom.com we put the law on your side.
5:31 am
5:32 am
5:33 am
president obama blamed bad intel for the rise of isis or sooim isil as a he calls it and today we know the president missed a lot of his meetings. senator graham joining us here today to react.
5:34 am
so the government accountability institute says the president of the united states only attended 4 42% of his daily intel briefings. so he was saying they missed it, talking about the intel community. maybe he missed it. >> does he have a television? how could anybody miss this that is paying any attention at all? senator mccain and i said in october of 2013 watch out for isis. they're filling in the vacuum created pie nby not supporting free syrian and i remember. let's have a hearing, call the intel people in and say who is to blame here. did you fail to tell our president about the rise of isis l isis/isil this did you tell him anything about the degrading of the iraqi army? the one thing that ticks me off is the surprise we have about the inability of the iraqi arm to take the fight to isil. if you'd followed anything at all after we left no troops
5:35 am
behind, halmaliki gutted the ir army of any leadership. it wasn't a surprise if you're paying any attention what is going on in iraq. >> jen psaki was just on with us on the president getting his intelligence believinge briefin. >> there is information the president he receives on a daily basis and a range makes the decision to designate a terrorest organization, that made the decision to thk assistance to the iraqi security forces, that made the decision to do strikes last puig. the president has been leading with the support of his national security team to take on this threat and take on this fight. and anyone in the intelligence community will tell you it's very hard to predict, nearly impossible to predict that a force like the iraqi security forces were going to lay down their arms and not fight back. >> is it predicting when you've had information coming at you you from a number of different sources? >> it was all predictable. thooe ye three years ago, senator mccain
5:36 am
and i said if you don't help the syrian army, you're missing a great opportunity. russia went all in, hezbollah went all into help assad and this vacuum created has been filled by isil and other terrorist organizations. when we left no troops behind in iraq, maliki purged the army of all the people we trained and put his cronies in will. and let me tell you this, mr. president, if you do a deal with iran like you're proposing, it will report in the authorinorth outcome. you need to talk to libya. >> during the president's re-election campaign, he said, you know, bin laden's gop ane a we killed off al qaeda. none of that was true. bin laden was dead, but al qaeda on the run? not really. and for jen psaki to parse words
5:37 am
about that's affair affiliate, that's core al qaeda. >> all i can say, mr. president, you will never destroy isil without boots on the ground. you won't get an arab army to go in and defeat isil without substantial american help. and if you want to destroy isil inside of iraq, you better rebuild the iraqi army and get sunnis away from the anbar region and arm the kurds. you're doing up in of this. >> kurds aren't getting armed yet? >> no, not in any substantial way. the president says terrorists only understand the language of force. but he's not fluent in that language. all he talks about is what we won't do. you can't destroy isil without an army engaging isil. >> thank you very much. good to see you. heather, now you have the other
5:38 am
news that you've been following. good morning. listen up. before you you swipe your credit card, hackers hitting the grocery are stores stealing data from thousands of people who shop at super value and albertsons. this affecting at least a dozen states so far. the hack took place back in august and also earlier this month. and do you remember the lady heaping praise on the obama phone program during the presidential election? >> obama phone. he's obama president, you know. sign up, you got low income, disability. >> oh, my. it turns out that that free cell phone program may be working a little too well. it has grown 100 fold over the past three years in the state of maryland alone. 645,000 people signed up, double the number who are supposed to be eligible based on income.
5:39 am
it claims it has programs in place to try to cut down on the fraud. police are on the hunt for this woman, she spends her night with the date and then robs them. the alleged thief seen here with $16,000 worth of loot, including a rolex. she's walking out in men's shoes. police think she just waits for them to fall asleep. one seattle area woman is a little fuzzy on the law there. a washington state patrol pulled over a woman speeding in the car pool lane. look what was in her people e's seat. a big fuzzy bear. she and her bear walked away with an $818 ticket. those are your headlines. i don't think that accounts for the high occupancy vehicle. thank you very much. coming up, he's accused of beheading a co-worker, but the
5:40 am
federal government won't call it failure. peter johnson jr. on that next. plus the queen of cooking pack in action and it's a family affair. paula deen and her son, we'll find out who her favorite is. bay affair. paula deen and her son, we'll find out who her favorite is. she's still the one for you.
5:41 am
and cialis for daily use
5:42 am
helps you be ready anytime the moment is right. cialis is also the only daily ed tablet approved to treat symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or any allergic reactions like rash, hives, swelling of the lips, tongue or throat, or difficulty breathing or swallowing, stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis for daily use and a free 30-tablet trial.
5:43 am
it's a tale of the isis blame game. >> our head of the intelligenc community jim clapper acknowledged that they underestimated what had been taking place in syria. >> we know the growth in the
5:44 am
middle east was understatemented, but what about the man right here in the ha heartland? are more terrorists being created here on our soil and if so, why want the white house admit it? two minutes of truth, peter johnson jr.. >> good morning. it's a convenient cover for the federal government to cover ft. hood and owning la acts of workplace violence. it's hard for them to call terror terrorism. especially if it means admitting that the government fell asleep at the terror switch the last six years. or to confess that on the internet and in the prisons and jails in america, we're losing the information war. in iraq, afghanistan and syria, we may be losing the geographical war, too. hating america is a powerful excuse especially when america doesn't talk back or fight back as much as it should. especially when the president admits surprise at the rise of isis because intelligence officials, well, screwed up. we are reassured radicalized
5:45 am
americans are the lone wolves amongst us, but hard to spot and in the end so few amount to might go until the wolves run in packs on to ours and factories. the attorney general says we shouldn't profile. his mom says the acts were not those of the child she raised. and we are equally disbelieving hated from could come so far and so fast into our homeland. but we should believe what we have seen. and we have a right to anticipate that the leaders must act accordingly. first step to identifying americans who want to terrorize other americans is to admit that they exist. and to refuse to allow phony explanations of their conduct as the mere workplace violence of
5:46 am
disgruntled employees. our government's past failures in eradicating the terrorist threat from inside and outside the borders is the not really the issue. it's time for us to sim ummon o exception exceptional list foc wrong. it's time to proclaim what makes it a great albeit somewhat flawed people. we are a great people because as much as we're optimists, we're also realists. we know workplace violence. on september 11, 2001 here in new york city, those working at the world trade center experienced it in the form of two hijacked jets. 13 years later, it's reality time in america and the stake s couldn't be any higher. american people are waiting for a signal of hope from their government. and elisabeth, it's called the truth.
5:47 am
>> powerful two minutes. thank you. mornings are sure better with friends. and paula deen and her sons are joining us next. but first, we'll check in with what's coming up at the top of the hour. >> she's all healthy now. i don't know if i like that. elisabeth, good morning. the intel community firing back. don't blame us for missing isis. former cia director will address it live. and a hearing will happen live today. breaking news on the missing mother and real estate agent found overnight. and does virginia have a serial killer? see in you 12 minutes.
5:48 am
5:49 am
5:50 am
5:51 am
we have breaking news out of north carolina. a school on lockdown after a shooting. one person is hurt after another opened fire inside. there are reports that the person shot is a student. no word on his or her condition just yet. the shooter thousand is in police custody. and again, albemarle high school in north carolina is on lockdown. shooter is in custody. in the meantime, switching gears, she's been off the air for more than a year after a scandal that made national headlines, but this morning paula deen is climbing back to the top with her launch of a new network. >> in my world, food is comfort. food is friendship. and food is love. y'all have been so wonderful to have me in y'all's home over the years. well, now i would like to invite
5:52 am
you into my home. welcome to the paula deen network. >> that's right. and joining us are paula deen and her two boys, jamie and bobby. good morning. >> it's great being back. >> great to have you back, as well. >> we're so excited about the network. >> i can imagine. first of all, let's start, how is your health? >> you know, it's really good. my last checkup, my a1 dc was 5.4. >> what's that? >> it's like sugar.dc was 5.4. >> what's that? >> it's like sugar.c was 5.4. >> what's that? >> it's like sugar. so i'm doing very, very well. god's blessed me with great physical strength. >> that's great. you've had quite a year. sman what you're doing on the new network. >> it's so much done. my son loves it and what we're doing is we're actually making it -- we're helping you save
5:53 am
money, save have great tools fo shopping. it's entertaining, fun, a look if to our family's life. >> bobly takes the persona of a '70s game show host. and jack my oldest grandson has got it down perfect. >> all right. it's fun. it's fun and also a very useful tool for people. >> i was on the website yesterday and there are a lot of good recipes. >> and tips. we make and yyou a grocery list. but you take your phone to the grocery store and it breaks down by the aisle for you. and i have found that if i go without a list, i spend much more homoney.
5:54 am
if i have a list, i stick to it. >> you don't need to put many things on your list if you make the cheese ball. >> this is a very simple recipe. we do have lighter menus, la lighter fare. but we're using full bacon, mayonnaise and cheese. >> it's football season, steve. an so you need dips and things like that around while you're watching the football game. >> you need good cheese balls. >> yes. >> you can make a ball and then put dried tomatoes on it anded it look like an apple. >> he bosses me around all the ti time. here i'm doing your ball for you. you're supposed to be doing this. >> i'm watching them with the bacon.
5:55 am
so real simple. cream cheese, mayonnaise -- >> you can put anything you want to in it. >> and what are you doing here? >> just sicking the toasted almonds in. so it looks like -- >> because take a look at what it looks like at the end. >> just use fresh rosemary. isn't that cute? because you know what, this time of year, i would probably do it in the shape of a pumpkin. >> what would you put on the outside? >> just that. he'd be a brown pumpkin. >> look how smart you are. >> yeah, taste it. but any shape. you can also do this in the shape of a football, shape of a basketball. but isn't that yummy? >> delicious. needs more bacon. >> you're right. >> i'm a firm believer -- and
5:56 am
that's what i'm trying to do for this network. i don't think when you go into the kitchen it should be hard. >> it should be fun. >> it should be fun because that's the way we get our children, our family, our friends in the kitchen with us. it's that vehicle. i call my boys and say i'm frying pork chops, they're there. >> early. >> check it out. it's paula deen network.com. more as we roll on live from new york city.
5:57 am
5:58 am
5:59 am
one for the road. watch this incredible trick play. quarterback walks through the defensive line and walks into a
6:00 am
touchdown. coach said he imitated a play from 1994 and renamed it the ugly kardashian. >> that was great. bill: there are stunning new details about the latest white house breach. they are learning the men who hopped the fence made it all into the white house before being caught by the secret service. i'm bill hemmer. martha: i'm martha maccallum. these new developments will likely take center stage as julia pearson will testify before the house and she'll have to stick up for her agency on

509 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on